871 research outputs found
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Search for the top quark and other new particles at D0
Preliminary results from the search for the top quark and other new particles in p[bar p] collisions at [radical]s = 1.8 TeV are reported. In a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of about 7.5 pb[sup [minus]1], one candidate event for top quark is found in the di-lepton channel. A lower limit for the mass of the top quark of 103 GeV/c[sup 2] (99 Gev/c[sup 2]) is obtained at 95% confidence level with (without) background subtraction. Status of searches for other new particles that may arise from new phenomena beyond the standard model is summarized
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Low energy response of the D0 calorimeter and jet energy measurement
Previous studies of the D[O] calorimeter with electron and hadron beams above 10 GeV/c have shown excellent linearity of response and e/[pi] ratio close to one. Here we report on our measurements of the response of the DO central calorimeter modules down to 2 GeV/c. The measured low energy response for electrons and pions are fragmentation from the PYTHIA Monte Carlo to obtain the corrections for jet energy
ANALYTICAL METHOD DEVELOPMENT AND VALIDATION FOR DIPYRIDAMOLE
A sensitive, specific, precise and cost effective High Performance Liquid Chromatographic method of analysis for dipyridamole in presence of its degradation products is developed and validated. The method employed Targa C8 column i.e., (250 X 4.6 mm 5 μm particle size) column as stationary phase. The mobile phase consists of acetonitrile and pH3.0 buffer in the ratio of 35:65 %. It is pumped through the chromatographic system at a flow rate of 1.2 ml/min. The UV detector is operated at 282 nm. This system was found to give good resolution between dipyridamole and its degradation products. Method was validated as per ICH guideline
Applying Bayesian Neural Networks to Separate Neutrino Events from Backgrounds in Reactor Neutrino Experiments
A toy detector has been designed to simulate central detectors in reactor
neutrino experiments in the paper. The samples of neutrino events and three
major backgrounds from the Monte-Carlo simulation of the toy detector are
generated in the signal region. The Bayesian Neural Networks(BNN) are applied
to separate neutrino events from backgrounds in reactor neutrino experiments.
As a result, the most neutrino events and uncorrelated background events in the
signal region can be identified with BNN, and the part events each of the fast
neutron and He/Li backgrounds in the signal region can be
identified with BNN. Then, the signal to noise ratio in the signal region is
enhanced with BNN. The neutrino discrimination increases with the increase of
the neutrino rate in the training sample. However, the background
discriminations decrease with the decrease of the background rate in the
training sample.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figures, 1 tabl
Plasma Turbulence in the Local Bubble
Turbulence in the Local Bubble could play an important role in the
thermodynamics of the gas that is there. The best astronomical technique for
measuring turbulence in astrophysical plasmas is radio scintillation.
Measurements of the level of scattering to the nearby pulsar B0950+08 by
Philips and Clegg in 1992 showed a markedly lower value for the line-of-sight
averaged turbulent intensity parameter is smaller than normal for two of them, but is completely nominal for
the third. This inconclusive status of affairs could be improved by
measurements and analysis of ``arcs'' in ``secondary spectra'' of pulsars.Comment: Submitted to Space Science Reviews as contribution to Proceedings of
ISSI (International Space Science Institute) workshop "From the Heliosphere
to the Local Bubble". Refereed version accepted for publicatio
Improving Application of Bayesian Neural Networks to Discriminate Neutrino Events from Backgrounds in Reactor Neutrino Experiments
The application of Bayesian Neural Networks(BNN) to discriminate neutrino
events from backgrounds in reactor neutrino experiments has been described in
Ref.\cite{key-1}. In the paper, BNN are also used to identify neutrino events
in reactor neutrino experiments, but the numbers of photoelectrons received by
PMTs are used as inputs to BNN in the paper, not the reconstructed energy and
position of events. The samples of neutrino events and three major backgrounds
from the Monte-Carlo simulation of a toy detector are generated in the signal
region. Compared to the BNN method in Ref.\cite{key-1}, more He/Li
background and uncorrelated background in the signal region can be rejected by
the BNN method in the paper, but more fast neutron background events in the
signal region are unidentified using the BNN method in the paper. The
uncorrelated background to signal ratio and the He/Li background to
signal ratio are significantly improved using the BNN method in the paper in
comparison with the BNN method in Ref.\cite{key-1}. But the fast neutron
background to signal ratio in the signal region is a bit larger than the one in
Ref.\cite{key-1}.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure and 1 table, accepted by Journal of Instrumentatio
A High Statistics Search for Ultra-High Energy Gamma-Ray Emission from Cygnus X-3 and Hercules X-1
We have carried out a high statistics (2 Billion events) search for
ultra-high energy gamma-ray emission from the X-ray binary sources Cygnus X-3
and Hercules X-1. Using data taken with the CASA-MIA detector over a five year
period (1990-1995), we find no evidence for steady emission from either source
at energies above 115 TeV. The derived upper limits on such emission are more
than two orders of magnitude lower than earlier claimed detections. We also
find no evidence for neutral particle or gamma-ray emission from either source
on time scales of one day and 0.5 hr. For Cygnus X-3, there is no evidence for
emission correlated with the 4.8 hr X-ray periodicity or with the occurrence of
large radio flares. Unless one postulates that these sources were very active
earlier and are now dormant, the limits presented here put into question the
earlier results, and highlight the difficulties that possible future
experiments will have in detecting gamma-ray signals at ultra-high energies.Comment: 26 LaTeX pages, 16 PostScript figures, uses psfig.sty to be published
in Physical Review
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